MLB Statistics

Historical (past-seasons) WARP is now based on DRA..
cFIP and DRA are not available on a by-team basis and display as zeroes(0). See TOT line for season totals of these stats.Multiple stints are are currently shown —Click to hide.

YEAR

Team

Lg

G

GS

IP

W

L

SV

H

BB

SO

HR

PPF

H/9

BB/9

HR/9

K/9

GB%

BABIP

WHIP

FIP

ERA

cFIP

DRA

DRA-

WARP

2018

NYA

MLB

3

0

2.7

0

0

0

4

3

0

1

111

13.5

10.1

3.4

0.0

55%

.300

2.63

11.44

10.13

114

6.56

146.6

-0.1

2019

SEA

MLB

5

4

22.3

0

1

0

27

12

22

3

97

10.9

4.8

1.2

8.9

60%

.375

1.75

4.88

4.43

101

5.35

109.3

0.1

Career

MLB

8

4

25.0

0

1

0

31

15

22

4

99

11.2

5.4

1.4

7.9

59%

.365

1.84

5.58

5.04

103

5.48

113.3

0.0

Statistics for All Levels

'opp' stats - Quality of opponents faced - have been moved and are available only as OPP_QUAL in the Statistics reports now.Minor league stats are currently shown —Click to hide.

BP Articles

BP Chats

What happened to Justus Sheffield this year? Granted he's pitching in the PCL, but it looks like he's taken a few steps back.(Rich from New Jersey)

This isn't really isolated to Sheffield, right? He's not the same level of prospect but DeJong also had to go back to Double-A in recent memory for the Mariners. I think it's a combination of the PCL, the ball, and a bad stretch and hopefully Sheffield can come out of it. He can still make an impact but there was always a bit of bust in the profile. (Craig Goldstein)

When does Justus Sheffield see the Bronx and what does it mean to work on command (as he is supposedly doing) just more reps?(Aron from NY)

I suspect Sheffield debuts in some sort of second-half pen role, given the issues there so far in the Bronx. "Working on command" can be a catch all for a lot of things. Mechanics repetition tends to be his specific issue though. As I've often said, if I could predict command jumps, I'd have a much better baseball job. (Jeffrey Paternostro)

what are we getting from justus sheffield this year?(matt from chicago)

I love Justus Sheffield. It seems like he has a shot to steal that last rotation spot with all the injury problems they've had there. If not, he can slide into the pen and make use of that nasty slider. So, yea, I don't think he's long for AAA. (Anthony Rescan)

Has anyone done anything in the AFL to change their outlook a decent amount?
I know many preach that they don't give much weight to AFL performance...and then those same people rank Gleyber Torres #1 after what he did in 2016. (Marvin from FLA)

I don't really put much stock in Fall Ball past seeing if guys are healthy (Albert Abreu for example). Wide variety of competition level, pitchers are gassed, run environment akin to the surface of the moon. If you need the league to tell you Ronald Acuna, Estevan Florial, and Justus Sheffield are really good prospects, I wonder what you were doing all Summer (and in some cases, in 2016). (Jeffrey Paternostro)

I'd probably drop Baez behind the first two (and we have people that lurrrrrve Gore internally as well), but I also maybe wouldn't argue he has the best chance to be a #1 there. You could also argue Fulmer is actually the closest to *being* a 1, and you would of course be right, but his elbow situation is worrisome. (Jeffrey Paternostro)

Who leads the next wave of Yankee prospects to make it to the big leagues, Gleyber or one of the young pitchers?(Joao from Baltimore)

I'm assuming this means who gets there first? As of right now I would say that Chance Adams may find himself in New York before Gleyber Torres, but only because they may want to keep Gleyber down for Super Two purposes. The Yankees may be losing both CC Sabathia and Masahiro Tanaka this winter (although I wouldn't be shocked if they both come back). They may go out and get someone like Alex Cobb, but Adams will have a role to play. You'll also see Justus Sheffield at some point, but he's a little bit further off. Adams could probably break camp with the big team and be okay, but I doubt that happens. (Nicolas Stellini)

AL East, what minor league pitchers will get the call in the second half? Chance Adams, Brent Honeywell? How do you think they do?(Stan from Baltimore)

Those are good bets, I'd think we'd see Adams sooner rather than later, although I'm not sure if they have him on an innings limit. I think he will hold his own. Honeywell is super fun and his K:BB is great, but he's still getting hit around a bit in AAA. I'd guess he appears as a reliever in September and excels in that role and auditions for a rotation spot next spring.

Limiting it to the AL East...Justus Sheffield could also survive at the back of the rotation maybe? (Nick Schaefer)

Hey Jarrett. Which prospects are you higher on than your colleagues & why? Vice versa which ones are you lower on & why?(David from Atlantis)

I'm probably the internal high guy on Justus Sheffield, really because I saw him later in the season than everyone else. Either he was emptying the tank with the end near or he'd progressed a fair amount, or both.

I suspect I'm the low guy on Brad Zimmer. I just don't know if there's an adjustment to MLB-quality pitching coming, and he's running out of time. (Jarrett Seidler)

Beyond your run of the mill elite prospects (e.g. Urias, Giolito, Glasnow) and thoroughly discussed players (e.g. Lugo, Gsellman), which starting pitching prospects are you looking forward to getting a shot this year? Why?(PunchoutPappy from First in Flight)

I'd like to get more looks at Justus Sheffield, who I saw once and loved and should see a lot more of in Trenton. The aforementioned Michael Kopech, too. (Jarrett Seidler)

How's this crop relative to other drafts? Is it deep in terms of projectability or more top-heavy? (Hoof Hearted from Booze Cruise)

I think overall, the 2016 class will have some value throughout--though won't be the most superstar-laden, either.

In terms of how talent is dispersed (top-heavy vs. depth), I think there's 55 or 60-grade depth, depending on how some of the prep arms turn out. When one of the strengths of a draft class is high school pitching--a demographic that usually will fall in the Draft--there's a chance for potentially high-ceiling talent outside of the first 30 picks.

Justus Sheffield, Robert Tyler, Dakota Hudson, and Alec Hansen are college arms who could have big league futures, all drafted outside the top 30 picks.

You're welcome. I'd say that's a little on the high side, as much as I like Frazier. But I've been infatuated with Zimmer for a really long time. Maybe I'm underrating Frazier, though. (Christopher Crawford)

Does Juan Hillman last to pick 41? Do the Braves concentrate of LH pitchers? (Tim from AZ)

I think he probably does, just because of the concerns over the upside. He's sort of the "Justus Sheffield" of the draft, and he'd be very nice value. I've heard the Braves more on college pitchers and the Atlanta preps than LHP. (Christopher Crawford)